You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.

on behalf of everyone (members and guests) thank you mrsD for your insightful knowledge and advice that you give to all of us...you have a wealth of knowledge and a greater willingness to share for the benefit of all of us

even a retired pharmacist like myself has learned a lot from you....and I, too, go back to the manual typewriter and bates machine era

on behalf of everyone (members and guests) thank you mrsD for your insightful knowledge and advice that you give to all of us...you have a wealth of knowledge and a greater willingness to share for the benefit of all of us

even a retired pharmacist like myself has learned a lot from you....and I, too, go back to the manual typewriter and bates machine era

again, on behalf of everyone, thank you....

YES!! She is the most consistent "answerer". Very help, supportive, as well and informative! Thank you for your time and consideration MrsD!!!

I've learned so much also from these forums. Each post is an opportunity to learn more. I've made dear friends online also in the past decade or so.

I've learned to respect my body, to listen to it, and pay attention to the things around it to protect it, too. To be logical and avoid invasive procedures if possible. To allow my body to heal. I've had severe reactions to iodine based visualization media for Xrays etc. I guess I am lucky to be typing this today!

I remember when I was an intern at a portable typewriter in my first non-clerical pharmacy job. The owner had never seen a touch typist before in a pharmacy! He was astounded I could type so fast.
I learned at 8 yrs old from my mother who taught me on an old Remington manual upright. It was a beast and I barely had the strength to hit the keys hard enough. Last Tuesday I bought my first smart phone--iPhone. (Had to change to AT &T for our summer home coverage) What an amazing time it has been learning to run it! What a contrast! That little Qwerty graphic! GADS!

Thank you very much for your kind words.

__________________

aka mrsdoubtfyre

All truths are easy to understand once they are discovered; the point is to discover them.-- Galileo Galilei

.

************************************

Weezie lying on plant bench 2015.

Please use the search function to find more information here in our forums. Your keyword must be at least 4 letters long. This is the handy link:

.

************************************

Here is a link to our guidelines that explains how to post links and information properly here due to copyright laws:

anyone who has replied 21,000+ posts deserves a public thank you from the thousands of people who have read and benefited from your knowledge and expertise...you have gone the extra mile for so many of us

you as well as all the other moderators have made this forum the best on the net

imo, your "stickies" should be "required reading" for all medical students for their basic neurology 101 classes and a "continuing education" course for all neurologists currently in practice

You know I don't understand why doctors remain oblivious to
new things. It is almost as if they have been "conditioned" to only accept drug reps, and other nearby doctors as sources.

But the world is filled with medical papers on so many subjects, all one has to do is LOOK at them. Japan for example led the way on B12 testing etc because of the horrific epidemic of low B12 from oral Vioform (now called clioquinol). This drug caused thousands of disabled, blinded, and dead people in the 70's there. You'll recall oral Vioform vanished from US shelves in the mid 70's or so, taken off by our FDA at the time. Also India has a huge number of patients with B12 deficiency and there are many papers from India about treatment etc that are very useful. This is due to the vegetarian diet many follow there.

But have doctors here learned about this? Nope.

It is almost like the middle ages still, where "doctors" bled weak and sick people to death, in spite of evidence that it didn't really work.
Barbers were the surgeons then, and also patched up soldiers
in battles. But the "doctors" were useless for the most part then.
I guess bleeding patients only worked for a short time on those with iron overload disease (hemochromatosis), so they generalized it to everyone!

My post numbers don't seem like so much if you take into consideration they are for 6 yrs. Also many posts are listed in our private admin area that you cannot see. But yes, I do think we all need to learn a bit more about how our bodies work, and how the CHEMISTRY works, so we can understand how to heal.

I am glad you like our forums. All of us on the community team have a special medical interest, and we all participate with our member hats as well as our moderator hats on a daily basis.
I think NeuroTalk is unique on the web. We are where confused and suffering people end up, in frustration with medical problems that are just not being addressed properly at the doctor's offices. Our MS and PD forums have many posted threads on the biochemistry of both of those neurological problems. I read them every day. I've learned reams from our PD posters, far more than from school, or my work day.

Do you remember Ashleigh Brilliant cartoons in the papers?
This was back in 70's and 80's mostly. But I had one card I bought with the saying : "If you learn one new thing each day, at the end of the year, you will know 365 new things."http://www.ashleighbrilliant.com/
Today's pot shot from that site:
The most important thing about studying Science, is never to take it
too seriously". Because of copyright I cannot post the card itself here.http://www.ashleighbrilliant.com/Pot...the%20Day.html

It is rather how I live today. And we must, as things are just too complex not to know a bit about autos, computers, smartphones, drugs, medical tests...etc. We have to know a bit about many things today, we never did 50 yrs ago. I remember
our family important papers filled a little metal box back then.
Now we have a ROOM full of family related papers, investments, receipts, bank statements, etc. Boy, life is getting very complex!

So now I am retired too, and have the time to share this way with others on the net. I am too lame and burned out physically from standing all those long hours, long weeks, and can't really get out much anymore. So I consider this my "community service" to give back before I pass on.

We have so many members here who are generous in this way and share, and help others. It really is a remarkable community!

__________________

aka mrsdoubtfyre

All truths are easy to understand once they are discovered; the point is to discover them.-- Galileo Galilei

.

************************************

Weezie lying on plant bench 2015.

Please use the search function to find more information here in our forums. Your keyword must be at least 4 letters long. This is the handy link:

.

************************************

Here is a link to our guidelines that explains how to post links and information properly here due to copyright laws:

The material on this site is for informational purposes only, and is not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis or treatmentprovided by a qualified health care provider. Always consult your doctor before trying anything you read here.